Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Germany’s AfD proposes following Trump’s lead on UN migration pact

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GERMAN anti-immigrant Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD) has demanded to join the U.S. and other Western countries in shunning a global compact to promote safe and orderly migration. Looking to follow President Trump’s path, AfD brought a motion to the Bundestag on Thursday demanding to stay out of the United Nations Global Compact for Migration.

“Millions of people from crisis-stricken regions around the world are being encouraged to get on the road," said AfD leader Alexander Gauland, as reported by Deutsche Welle. “Leftist dreamers and globalist elites want to secretly turn our country from a nation state into a settlement area.”

Railing against the newcomers, the AfD is now the biggest opposition party in the Bundestag, and after a strong showing in Hesse on Sunday now has seats in all of Germany’s state parliament­s.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel expressed her support for the U.N. pact, which is the subject of an adoption meeting set for Dec. 11-12 in Marrakech, Morocco. Germany worked intensivel­y on the text, and it ensures the sovereignt­y of individual nations, she said during a meeting with Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki in Warsaw last week. Merkel is fighting a battle at home and abroad against critics who accuse her of endangerin­g European security with her welcoming approach to migrants. Her conservati­ve coalition has long been under pressure from the far-right AfD.

In September 2016, all 193 U.N. member states, including the United States under President Barack Obama, adopted a declaratio­n saying no country can manage internatio­nal migration on its own and agreed to launch a process leading to the adoption of a global compact in 2018. But last December, the United States said it was ending its participat­ion in negotiatio­ns on the compact, stating that numerous provisions were “inconsiste­nt with U.S. immigratio­n and refugee policies” under President Donald Trump.

Following a move by Austria, Germany’s far-right Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD) earlier called on Berlin to follow Austria’s lead and withdraw from the planned U.N. agreement. “While the German federal government prefers to concern itself with its own incompeten­ce at a crucial time, action is being taken in Austria for the benefit of its people,” AfD co-leader Joerg Meuthen said, according to German news service dpa. In Meuthen’s view, the proposed U.N. pact is a “resettleme­nt program for economic refugees fleeing poverty.”

In July, Hungary said it would withdraw from the process.

Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto said that the pact was contrary to his country’s interests because while it had some positive aims, like fighting human traffickin­g, overall it considered migration unstoppabl­e and positive.

The compact has 23 objectives to boost cooperatio­n to manage migration and numerous actions ranging from technical issues like the portabilit­y of earnings by migrant workers to reducing the detention of migrants.

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